Illegal immigration is a decades-old
problem. With an estimated 11.5 million illegal immigrants living, and
in many cases working, in the U.S. the question remains: What do we do
with them? And how do we stop more people from coming? Lax enforcement
potentially leads to more illegal immigrants competing with U.S.
citizens for jobs and some social services. But a too-tight policy could
mean farmers and others in industries that rely on the cheaper labor of
illegal immigrants are left begging for workers, passing higher costs
on to consumers or going out of business altogether.
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Where they stand:
President
Barack Obama has pushed for the DREAM Act, a path to citizenship for
many young illegal immigrants who arrived in the U.S. as children.
Efforts to pass the bill have repeatedly failed, most notably in 2010
when it stalled in a Democratic-led Senate. In June, Obama announced a
plan to delay deportations for many illegal immigrants who would have
benefited from the DREAM Act for up to two years and let them get work
permits.
Mitt Romney has said that as president he would veto the
DREAM Act should it ever cross his desk, though during the second
presidential debate he said he supports a path to legal status for young
illegal immigrants. He would honor any work permits issued under
Obama's plan to delay deportations for many young illegal immigrants but
wouldn't accept new applications for the program. Romney favors
completing a towering steel fence along the Mexican border, in addition
to the 650 miles already constructed, and opposes letting illegal
immigrant students pay in-state tuition at state universities.
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Why it matters:
Illegal
immigration has slowed in recent years, with the Border Patrol recently
recording the fewest arrests in almost 40 years. But many people worry
that the Mexican border, the most popular crossing point for newly
arriving illegal immigrants, still isn't secure more than a decade after
the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
In the last several years,
the government has spent billions building a fence, doubling the number
of Border Patrol agents and adding a slew of high-tech gadgets to stop
illegal immigrants. The numbers tell a compelling story: In the 2011
budget year, the Border Patrol arrested about 327,000 people at the
Mexican border. In 2006, agents made more than 1 million such arrests.
Obama's
administration also deported a record number of people last year,
nearly 400,000. The government has been shifting its focus to finding
and deporting criminal immigrants and those who otherwise pose a
security threat.
There's room for debate about what has led to the
steep drop in arrests; it's quite clear the struggling economy has made
it less attractive to enter the U.S. Still, Republicans insist any
illegal crossings are too many. And there's broad agreement that the
border should be more secure.
As for illegal immigrants already in the country, there's no easy answer.
In
1986, under President Ronald Reagan, Congress approved an amnesty that
granted millions of immigrants legal status while prohibiting the hiring
of illegal immigrants.
Hiring has continued in many sectors, notably farming.
And some lawmakers worry that agriculture would sink if there were an
aggressive effort to verify that all farmworkers could legally work in
the U.S.
Various overhauls of immigration policy have been
proposed since the early 2000s. But the debate often boils down to
Republicans wanting the border secure before anything else, and
Democrats pushing for that security and for a path to legalization at
once. The result has been a legislative stalemate.